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Bruce Judd, Margaret Kay, Catherine Bridge & Toni Adams City Futures Research Centre, Faculty of Built Environment, University of New South Wales, and Local Government and Shires Association of NSW. Ageing, the Built Environment and Livability in an Extreme Climate. Presentations.
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Bruce Judd, Margaret Kay, Catherine Bridge & Toni Adams City Futures Research Centre, Faculty of Built Environment, University of New South Wales, and Local Government and Shires Association of NSW Ageing, the Built Environment and Livability in an Extreme Climate
Presentations 1. Compounding Vulnerability: Population Ageing, Climate Change Adaptation and the Built Environment Bruce Judd, City Futures Research Centre, UNSW 2. Local Government Ageing in Different Environments Margaret Kay, Local Government and Shires Associations of NSW 3. Ensuring Enabling and Supportive Regional Town Centres: An In-depth Look at Three from and Older Persons’ Perspective Catherine Bridge, City Futures Research Centre, UNSW 4. Policy Factors Which Impact on Older People’s Desire to Downsize Catherine Bridge (for Toni Adams) City Futures Research Centre UNSW
The Research Projects Ageing, the Built Environment and Adaptation to Climate Change Bruce Judd, Tracie Harvison & Rachelle Newman, University of NSW (Funded by Australian Climate Change Adaptation Network for Settlements and Infrastructure, 2011) The Local Government and Ageing Project Elizabeth O’Brien & Peter Phibbs, University of Western Sydney (Funded by NSW Ageing, Disability and Home Care, 2009-10) A User Appraisal of the Contribution of Built Environment Factors to the Independence and Wellbeing of Older People in Two NSW Regional Town Centres Catherine Bridge, Vijay Sivaraman, Margaret Kay, Lisa Langley, Bruce Judd, Aolly Li & Jason Thorne, University of NSW (Funded by Ageing, Disability and Home Care, NSW Department of Family and Community Services, (2011) Downsizing Amongst Older Australians Bruce Judd, Catherine Bridge, Hazel Easthope, Laura Davey, Toni Adams, Edgar Liu, University of NSW (Funded by the Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute) (2011-12)
Bruce Judd, Tracie Harvison & Rachelle Newman City Futures Research Centre, Faculty of Built Environment University of New South Wales Compounding Vulnerability: Population Ageing, Climate Change Adaptation and the Built Environment
The Research Project Funding: Australian Climate Change Adaptation Network for Settlements and Infrastructure (ACCARNSI) of the National Climate Change Adaptation Resource Facility (NCCARF) Research Team: Bruce Judd, Tracie Harvison & Rachelle Newman City Futures Research Centre, UNSW Aim: to understand the relationship between the impacts of climate change and population ageing, and the role of the built environment in reducing the vulnerability of older people to climate change. Method: International Literature review to identify: • The vulnerabilities of older people to climate change • Adaptation strategies to reduce vulnerability • Current policy responses to support adaptation • Synergies and conflicts between policies for climate change adaptation and population ageing
The Issue Strong scientific evidence that climate change is occurring due to global warming and that this is attributed to human activity (IPCC, 2007; The Global Humanitarian Forum, 2009; CSIRO, 2011) At the same time there is a global trend toward population ageing Climate change and population ageing are now two of the major concerns of Government policy worldwide, each with wide social, economic and environmental implications Older people and young children are the most vulnerable groups to the impacts of climate change However, only rarely have the combined effects of these two trends been considered together When they are, a compounding problem is evident The built environment has and important role to play in the adaptation of an ageing population to climate change
Global Ageing Source: United Nations, 2009 (Extract from UN Table on Population Ageing and Development)
Ageing in Australia Australian Bureau of Statistics Estimates 2004-2051 Percentage of 65 yrs and over will double Percentage of 85 yrs and over will quadruple 40 year forecast of huge budget blowout (Australian Treasury, 2002) due to reduced tax base and increased costs of pensions, health and aged care A major social and economic policy challenge Ageing in place a key policy strategy Increased level of home-based aged care Housing design? Urban/neighbourhood design? Public transport infrastructure?
Climate Change Definition: “…a statistically significant variation in either the mean state of the climate or in its variability, persisting for an extended period (typically decades or longer)” (IPCC, 2007) Causes: Population growth and human activity resulting in increases in carbon dioxide emissions leading to increased warming of global temperatures Consequences: • Melting of polar ice caps resulting in sea level rise • Disruption to food supply and water resources • Damage to physical infrastructure • Increased public health risks • Modified global biogeochemical cycles, as well as oceanic and atmospheric circulation patterns (IPCC, 2007)
The Built Environment Why urban environments are important 60-80% of the world’s energy use emanates from cities and urbanised areas (IEA, 2008) 50% of the world’s population now lives in urbanised areas (OECD, 2010) By 2050, 70% in developing countries and 80% in developed countries will be living in cities (OECD, 2010) Cities contribute to climate change in three main ways: • Direct emissions of greenhouse gases • Greenhouse emissions from outside embodied in urban infrastructure • City-induced changes to atmospheric chemistry and surface reflectivity (urban heat island effect) (OECD, 2010)
Australia’s Climate Highly variable and diverse climate due to size and location of the continent Ranging from tropical (hot/humid) north, arid (hot/dry) interior, temperate (cool) south east Parts of Australia are prone to tropical cyclones, coastal erosion, floods, droughts and bushfires Dorothea Mackellar’s poem: I love a sun burnt country A land of sweeping plains Of rugged mountain ranges Of droughts and flooding rains I love her far horizons I love her jewel sea Her beauty and her terror The wide brown land for me
Global Emissions Source: Data from Energy Information Agency (Department of Energy), cited by Union of Concerned Scientists 2010
Per Capita Emissions Source: Data from Energy Information Agency (Department of Energy), cited by Union of Concerned Scientists 2010
Addressing Climate Change Mitigation Refers to efforts to reduce or stabilise greenhouse gas emissions through investment and development of more sustainable infrastructure and/or prohibition of less sustainable practices. (UNDP, 2010) Longer term focus – future generations Adaptation Refers to coping strategies in response to the consequences of climate change allowing (UNDP, 2010) Shorter term focus – current population Relationship In reality, these often overlap and can be complimentary or contradictory
Climate Change Impacts in Australia • Impacts on physical infrastructure • materials (expansion, cracks, damage) • structures (flood and cyclone damage) • transport (damage, flooding) • flood damage (housing, public domain) • coastal infrastructure • Many of these will impact on older people disproportionately Temperature increases • extreme heat days • droughts • bushfires • urban heat island effect Sea level rise • storm surges, • coastal flooding, • coastal erosion Extreme weather events • increased severity of cyclones • intensive rainfall and flooding • Storms/hail storms
Australia’s Climate Extremes Source: Neil Keene The Daily TelegraphMay 18, 2012
Australia’s Climate Source: Neil Keene The Daily TelegraphMay 18, 2012
Vulnerability to Climate Change Source: Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), 2001 Third Assessment Report. p. 32
Health Exposures Attributed to Climate Change • Temperature related morbidity and mortality • Heatwaves • Bushfires • Disruption to local food supply • Extreme weather events • Tropical cyclones/storm surge • Severe thunder storms • Flooding • Impacts on air quality • Air borne pollutants • Water and food borne diseases • Contaminated by pathogens (eg Cholera) • Vector and rodent borne diseases • Malaria, yellow fever, dengue fever • Heatwaves: • Responsible for the death of more Australians than any other natural disaster. (Coats 1996) • 2009 Victorian 9 day Heatwave: • 80% of the 374 fatalities were people 65+ (84% of these 75+) (Cooper, 2009)
Global Health Impact ofClimate Change 2010-2030 145% increase predicted over 20 years Source: DARA, 2010 The most vulnerable are those with pre-existing health conditions or weakened immune and metabolic resistance – i.e. the very young and the old. (McMichael et al, 2006)
Sensitivities of Older People • Physiological: Increased probability of pre-existing chronic disease and/or physical impairment resulting in: • Reduced mobility, physical strength and stamina; • Difficulties thermo regulating body temperature placing older persons at a higher risk of hypothermia and/or heat stress; • Difficulties perceiving risks or dangers due to impairment of senses including sight, sound but also temperature; • Skin being more fragile with age; • an impaired immune system increasing the risk of infection and/or reaction to toxins and pathogens in the environment.
Sensitivities of Older People • Psychological: Higher risk of becoming isolated and/or disengaged from society as a result of: • retirement from full-time employment • reasons for engagement as well as • loss of income supporting or allowing engagement in activities; • loss of friends or a spouse; • reduced mobility due to physical or cognitive impairment. • Economic: Increasing risk of financial stress and/or loss of economic independence with age due to retirement from full time employment.
Adaptation and the Built Environment • Housing: • Energy conservation to reduce increasing costs • Thermal control (passive and active systems) • Robust design to withstand extreme weather events • Neighbourhood/Urban Public Spaces: • Urban greening to reduce Urban Heat Island (UHI) effect • Material choices that reduce reflectivity and UHI • Shade (trees, shelter devices) • Urban Planning: • Land use & evacuation planning in areas of risk from extreme weather, bushfires, cyclones, floods • Transport Infrastructure • Safe, accessible, convenient, comfortable, reliable, affordable public transport
Conclusion • Population ageing and climate change are two of the most critical areas of policy in the 21st century • To date they have largely been seen as separate areas of policy • Older people, particularly the older old (75+) are amongst the most vulnerable groups to the impacts of climate change • The growth, particularly of the older old cohort, will see vulnerability to climate change increase dramatically in the first half of the 21st century • This compounding vulnerability effect needs to be taken into consideration in both climate change and ageing policy • The built environment (housing, urban/neighbourhood design, land use planning, and transport infrastructure) will have an important role to play in climate change adaptation for an ageing population
References Australian Bureau of Statistics (2006) Census of Population and Housing, Canberra Australian Treasury (2002) Intergenerational Report 2002-03. Canberra: Commonwealth of Australia. Coates, L. (1996). An Overview of Fatalities from Some Natual Hazards in Australia’. NDR96 Conference on Natural Disaster Reduction. Gold Coast, Australia: 49-54. Cooper, M. (2009). "Death Toll Soared During Victoria's Heatwave". The Age. Melbourne. Department of Health and Ageing [DoHA] (2006) A Community for All Ages: Building the Future: The Findings and Recommendations of the National Speakers Series June 2006. Commonwealth of Australia, Canberra. Harvison, T., Newman, R. & Judd, B. (2011) Ageing, the Built Environment and Adaptation to Climate Change. NCCARF/ACCARNSI, Sydney. International Energy Agency (IEA), 2008 World Energy Outlook 2008, Paris. iPCC (2001). Climate Change 2001: Impacts, Adaptions and Vulnerabilitity. Contribution of Working Group II to the Third Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Edited by J. McCarthy, O. Canziani, N. Leary, D. Dokken and K. White. Cambridge UK: Cambridge University Press. IPCC (2007). Climate Change 2007 – The Physical Science Basis (Working Group I Contribution to the Fourth Assessment Report of the IPCC), Cambridge UK: Cambridge University Press. McMichael, A., Woodruff, R. & Hales, S. (2006). "Climate Change and Human Health: Present & Future Risks." Lancet, 367:9513: 859-869. The Global Humanitarian Forum, 2009, The Anatomy of a Silent Crisis (Human Impact Report, Climate Change), Geneva OECD & China Development Research Foundation, 2010 Trends in Urban Policies in OECD Countries: What Lessons for China? CSIRO (2007). "Climate change in Australia: Technical report, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Australia Government, Canberra. UNDP (2010) "Local governance and climate change: Discussion notes", United Nations Development Program; United Nations Capital Development Fund (UNCDF) and United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), Bangkok. Union of Concerned Scientists (2010). "Each country's share of CO2 emissions", accessed 20.6.2011 from <http://www.ucsusa.org/global_warming/science_and_impacts/science/each-countrys-share-of-co2.html>. United Nations (2009). "Population Ageing & Development 2009", Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population DivisionTables. S. E. S. A/290. United Nations, New York, USA
Report Available Online http://www.nccarf.edu.au/wwwold/settlements-infrastructure/ re